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Trump says he’s leaving his businesses to avoid conflicts

CATHERINE LUCEY
Published 12:44 a.m. ET Dec. 1, 2016

Pedestrians walk near Trump Tower in New York on Wednesday. President- elect Donald Trump said he is leaving his businesses, and it appears that his three eldest children will take over the operations.(Photo: Bebeto Matthews / The Associated Press)

NEW YORK — President-elect Donald Trump declared Wednesday he will leave his business empire behind to focus on his presidency. But the prospect that he could simply shift more control to three of his adult children looked too cozy to some business-ethics specialists who suggest the arrangement could bring unprecedented conflicts of

interest into the Oval Office.

Trump announced in a series of early morning tweets that he would leave his “great business,” adding: “While I am not mandated to do this under the law, I feel it is visually important, as president, to in no way have a conflict of interest with my various businesses.”

Trump provided no details, though he said legal documents were being prepared. He previously had said he’d leave his business operations to his three eldest children — Donald Jr., Eric and Ivanka.

Asked if the tweets indicated plans to move the businesses to the children, Trump senior

adviser Kellyanne Conway said Wednesday, “it appears that way.”

“The three adult children who do already work in the corporation are expected to continue in those roles and in fact increase their responsibilities in those roles,” Conway said.

Ethics questions: Ethics

experts have pushed for Trump to fully exit the ownership of his businesses using a blind trust or equivalent arrangement.

“Otherwise he will have a personal financial interest in his businesses that will sometimes conflict with the public interest and constantly raise questions,” Norman Eisen, President Barack Obama’s chief ethics lawyer, and Richard Painter, who held the same post for President George W. Bush, said in a joint statement. The laws are generally loose for presidents regarding their businesses except when it comes to ties to or gifts from foreign governments.

All 16 Democratic members of House Judiciary Committee wrote to Chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., to

request hearings to examine conflicts-of-interest and

ethics provisions that might apply to Trump.

Cabinet meetings: Trump spent much of Wednesday conducting meetings in his Manhattan high-rise. His pick for secretary of state remains up in the air, though aides say he has narrowed his choices to four. One contender, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, dined with him Tuesday.

Trump has moved forward with other Cabinet selections, choosing former Goldman Sachs executive Steven

Mnuchin, 53, led Trump’s finance operations during the presidential campaign, but he has no government experience. If confirmed by the Senate, he would play a central role in shaping Trump’s tax policies and infrastructure plans.

Mnuchin would follow in the tradition of two previous Treasury secretaries who worked at the Goldman Sachs investment firm. During the campaign, Trump repeatedly criticized Hillary Clinton’s ties to Wall Street banks and hit her for paid speeches at Goldman Sachs.

Arriving at Trump Tower Wednesday, Mnuchin said the administration planned “the most significant middle income tax cut since Reagan.” He also called for lowering corporate taxes to encourage companies to stay in the U.S.

Jobs event: Meanwhile, Trump and Vice President-elect Mike Pence, the outgoing Indiana governor, planned an event Thursday in Indiana in connection with an announcement that the air-conditioning giant

Carrier Corp. planned to keep nearly 1,000 jobs in the state instead of moving them to Mexico.

Details of the agreement were unclear. Trump spent much of his campaign pledging to keep companies such as Carrier from moving jobs out of the U.S., but he also dismissed tax incentives and favorable financing deals often used by state officials to keep major employers home.

Trump’s sprawling business empire is unprecedented for a modern sitting president, as is the complexity and opaqueness of his holdings.

Eric Trump demurred Wednesday when asked for details on how his father would separate himself from his businesses, saying: “You’ll hear soon enough.”